It's a computing truism that when it comes to delivering the fastest possible speeds with high-performance computing (HPC), you must use native computing instead of virtualization. Recent studies have shown that, in some configurations, VMware's vSphere can actually deliver faster performance than native computing.

Believe it or not, with the right tuning, architecture, and workloads, some jobs will run faster VMware vSphere virtualization than native systems.

In one recent study, which will be described in detail at VMWorld in San Francisco in late August, Edmond DeMattia, Senior Virtualization Architect at Johns Hopkins University's Applied Physics Laboratory, will show how a vSphere implementation delivered better results than running on native hardware.

The HP benchmarking showed that with the right configuration of CPU cores, a virtualized environment exceeded the performance of physical environment in 2 cores and 4 cores configurations by about 4-percent and 6-percent respectively. In other configurations, the virtual performance, with 1 core, 6 cores, and 8 cores proved to be, respectively, 5-percent, 5-percent and 10-percent slower.

In short, while virtualization can speed processing up, it doesn't just magically make things better. Without the right architecture and tuning, virtualization will not deliver performance benefits.

In a more recent study, albeit one by VMware, the company found that vSphere 5.1 on a 32-system Linux cluster running the open-source big data program Hadoop on a single virtual machine (VM) per server showed performance that was close to native performance. Close, but no cigar.

However, by partitioning each host into two or four virtual machines, they were able to get significantly better performance. With two VMs, VMware found that the overall benchmark results with an 8 Terabyte dataset was almost as fast with native hardware,and with 4 VMs, the virtualized approach was actually 2-percent faster (PDF Link).

That may not sound like much, but when you're working with Big Data, that's a significant speed increase. Better still, it may also mean that you won't need to pay for as many physical servers to achieve the best possible results.

What all this means for you and your enterprise is that rather than just assuming that your HPC application needs can best be served by native hardware, you need to evaluate other, virtualization-based solutions to find the best match of performance, cost, and technology.

Thank You

By registering you become a member of the CBS Interactive family of sites and you have read and agree to the Terms of Use, Privacy Policy and Video Services Policy. You agree to receive updates, alerts and promotions from CBS and that CBS may share information about you with our marketing partners so that they may contact you by email or otherwise about their products or services.
You will also receive a complimentary subscription to the ZDNet's Tech Update Today and ZDNet Announcement newsletters. You may unsubscribe from these newsletters at any time.